Search Books

The Patriarch Jacob: Closing Mirror and Sin of Redemption: Mythology

Author Byrne, Christopher Alan
Publisher CreateSpace
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
25.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In Stock.

Share:
Book Details
PublisherCreateSpace
ISBN / ASIN1456507265
ISBN-139781456507268
AvailabilityIn Stock.
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

The Patriarch Jacob is my third of volumes to consider the origins of the Church in mythology themes from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. I present all Genesis Chapters having to do with Jacob; although much of this volume has to do with his son Joseph. He is thrown down a well by jealous brothers, and sold into slavery in Egypt. An Egyptian Princess attempts to extract relations and to then allege rape at a lack of success. Joseph takes to interpreting dreams, and foretells of a famine at the costs to the ordeal. His brothers and family end up in Egypt; when the famine destroys all source of food. The lineage from Jacob to Moses in four generations is presented; when the story of descend onto David and Jesus takes up to free the slaves. A concordance search of both Old and New Testament to the use of the name Jacob reports 50 verses, and to far outnumber use of Isaac verse about stories to a 'land'. Most of these are to the books of Isaiah and Jeremiah, and to tell of a fall to the city of Jerusalem to Babylonians. The martyrdom of Isaiah is reviewed in a rare work of literature; which reports the disgust in such hideous tales to merely sing church hymns. The Lord in time gives up the themes of torment to Jacob. He is said to restore lost 'fortunes' and to have him live in peace. A denial is directly quoted from Biblical verse to have the entire tale to be over 'nothing', and to lack any finding of a dollar to the story. A best insight could be a comparison of Old and New Testament; such as to get the story after four centuries in raising again the walls of Jersulem from Babylonian slavery, and to have Jesus Christ to appear in a mission to recover that to have been lost.